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Statement from the SC Tobacco Collaborative on H.3584 Passage

Posted: 5/13/2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MAY 13, 2010

A statement from the SC Tobacco Collaborative on the passage of H.3584, a bill to raise South Carolina's cigarette tax by 50 cents per pack. Quotes may be attributed to Nancy Cheney, Government Relations Director for the American Cancer Society or to Kelly Davis, spokeswoman for the South Carolina Tobacco Collaborative.

Today, the South Carolina Senate voted 33-13 to override Governor Mark Sanford's veto on H.3584, which will raise South Carolina's cigarette tax for the first time in 33 years.

The South Carolina Tobacco Collaborative has been waiting and working for this day for ten years. Today our legislators delivered a historic victory.

The new law passed today is a sweeping public health initiative that will impact the lives of South Carolinians for generations to come.

A 50-cent increase in our state's cigarette tax means that more than 23,000 kids under the age of 18 in South Carolina will never become smokers. Those kids will grow up to be adults who never smoke. Parents who never smoke. Grandparents who never smoke. Today we are creating generations of smoke-free and tobacco-free homes for our beautiful state.

You may be thinking: "I don't smoke, so how does this affect me?"

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, every household in South Carolina pays a hidden tax of $578 per year to cover tobacco-related healthcare costs. That's every household in South Carolina, whether they have a smoker in their home or not.

In addition, the $5 million that this law will allocate each year to smoking prevention and cessation programs means that we will have a dedicated source of recurring funding to further educate more children in South Carolina about the dangers of tobacco use and have the resources to help current smokers quit. A healthier South Carolina benefits every one of her citizens.

Each year, the tobacco industry spends $280 million to market their products in South Carolina. We have won this battle, but we haven't won the war.

Each of our member organizations remains committed to our primary mission of reducing the toll of tobacco use in our state. But for today, we will pause and celebrate a victory that has been ten years in the making.

We wouldn't be here if it weren't for the leadership of the House and Senate. At the risk of forgetting any of our many champions on both sides of the aisle, we will simply say thank you to all of those public servants -- 90 House members and 33 Senators -- who stood up this week for South Carolina's kids.